June laying on the ground, seemingly having a miscarriage.

2 Comments

  1. I’m trying to imagine how this show would handle the fall and rebuild. If it goes down that path. And, I will say, I do like the world building but I must admit I just wish the characters involved in it had that something to invest in. Besides familiarity.

  2. Surprised by some of the commentary on this episode… personally, I’ve found the “colonies” and “econopeople” diversions the most interesting parts of Season 2 so far… what is gained by them? I’d say that they offer some insight into what this world is like for the lower orders, whereas Season 1, like the novel, was largely confined to the white picket fenced suburbs of the elite ruling class… what I predict (or at least what I hope) comes from the colonies section are an insight into what it means to live with dignity when death is staring you in the face. It could be rather like a distaff sci-fi version of the Gulag novel “One Day In The Life Of Ivan Denisovich”

    So far, Season 2 has not gone the way I expected it to. I expected that it would focus more on resistance groups, our heroine’s heroic escape and the overthrow of Gilead that is alluded to at the end of the novel… perhaps because the 1990 movie ended with Offred assasinating Commander Fred and then (over the course of a single night) escaping to Canada to live happily ever after with Nick… the approach of Season 2 has been much more somber and focused on showing the nitty gritty inner workings of the society that were only fleetingly.

    The “prayvaganza” or group-wedding is in the book. The novel alludes to the fact that marriages are arranged by the state in Gilead but is vague as to the specific processes… Nick isn’t married off this way in the book, and it’s implied that as a lowly household staffer he wouldn’t have been eligible anyway, since in the book such brides are reserved for soldiers who have distinguished themselves in battle and high ranking government officials.

    The book explains that the teen-brides in white are the product of the first generation of Handmaid’s, or possibly-fertile females who were only children when the regime came to power…. I wondered why this scene was left out of Season 1, I thought perhaps showing barely legal teens getting married onscreen was something the producers were afraid would be too controversial, so I was surprised to see it now.

    Nick is younger in the TV series than he is the novel. Perhaps one reason they made him younger was so they could use his character to depict the new model of Gileadan marriage and it’d feel slightly less creepy if the age gap was smaller.

    Certainly I’m looking forward to seeing how Eden’s emotional arc develops… she has no memory of the world before and just takes the social fabric of this world for granted… for now, anyway… if they get round to showing the fall of Gilead, it’ll be interesting to see how she copes if she survives.

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